Search results for "DPPH"

showing 10 items of 137 documents

Antimicrobial and antioxidant properties of the essential oil of Salvia lanigera from Cyprus

2010

The essential oil of aerial parts of Salvia lanigera Poir. (Lamiaceae) growing wild in Cyprus was obtained by hydrodistillation and was analysed by GC and GC-MS. A total of 67 compounds, representing 93.6% of the oil, were identified, and the major components were showed to be thymol (12.1%), hexadecanoic acid (6.0%), carvacrol and α-thujone (5.7%). The essential oil was assayed for its antioxidant and antimicrobial activities. Antimicrobial activity of the oil, evaluated using the broth dilution method, resulted higher against Gram-positive bacteria than the other referenced strains tested. Antioxidant activity of the oil was evaluated by using DPPH and FRAP methods together with three ant…

Chromatography GasDPPHMicrobial Sensitivity TestsSalviaToxicologyAntioxidantsGas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometrylaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundAnti-Infective AgentslawBotanyOils VolatileCarvacrolSalviaGallic acidFood scienceThymolSalvia lanigeraEssential oilbiologyGeneral MedicineAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationchemistryCyprusFood ScienceFood and Chemical Toxicology
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Eucalyptol-based green extraction of brown alga Zonaria tournefortii

2018

Abstract A green extraction method, based on the use of 1,8-cineole (eucalyptol) as biosolvent, has been developed to prepare crude extracts from the brown alga Zonaria tournefortii characterized by chemical composition, particularly dominated by phenolic compounds derived from phloroglucinol. The main advantage of the developed technique are the recovery of eucalyptol, based on multistep liquid-liquid extraction with distilled water, followed by centrifugation and elimination of the aqueous phase, and the complete recycling of biosolvent by steam distillation. A comparative study between the proposed green extract and the conventional extract, prepared by solvent maceration using the mixtu…

Chromatography010405 organic chemistryDPPH010401 analytical chemistryExtraction (chemistry)Aqueous two-phase systemPharmaceutical ScienceManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesPollutionHigh-performance liquid chromatography0104 chemical scienceslaw.inventionSteam distillationchemistry.chemical_compoundEucalyptolchemistrylawMaceration (wine)Environmental ChemistryPhenolsSustainable Chemistry and Pharmacy
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Negative pressure cavitation accelerated processing for extraction of main bioactive flavonoids from Radix Scutellariae

2011

Abstract To enhance the extraction efficiency and reduce the energy consumption, an emerging technology named negative pressure cavitation extraction (NPCE) has been shown to be a feasible option for the extraction of bioactive compounds in agricultural crops and medicinal plants. Meanwhile, it can be applied at the pilot scale as a manufacturing process for edible and medicinal plants. Currently, NPCE was proposed for extraction of baicalin, wogonoside, baicalein and wogonin from Radix Scutellariae on the basis of a central composite design (CCD) and response surface methodology (RSM). With proper optimization (80 mesh of particle size, 40 mL/g of liquid/solid ratio, 75% aqueous ethanol as…

ChromatographyCentral composite designChemistryDPPHProcess Chemistry and TechnologyGeneral Chemical EngineeringExtraction (chemistry)Energy Engineering and Power TechnologyGeneral ChemistryIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringBaicaleinchemistry.chemical_compoundWogoninRadixResponse surface methodologyBaicalinChemical Engineering and Processing: Process Intensification
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Enhanced extraction of isoflavonoids from Radix Astragali by incubation pretreatment combined with negative pressure cavitation and its antioxidant a…

2011

Abstract Incubation pretreatment with the function of endogenous enzyme combined with negative-pressure cavitation extraction (IP-NPCE) was established to extract calycosin and formononetin from Radix Astragali. Significant factors involved in the process were selected using Plackett–Burman factorial design (PBD) and then were optimized by central composite design (CCD). The optimum experimental conditions were incubation at 35 °C, 60 min, pH 4.0 and extraction at negative pressure − 0.080 MPa, ethanol concentration 60%, 60 mesh, 30 min, solid-to-liquid ratio 1:25 and two cycles. Under the optimal conditions, the extraction yields of calycosin and formononetin were 0.650 ± 0.015 and 0.307 ±…

ChromatographyCentral composite designDPPHExtraction (chemistry)General ChemistryFactorial experimentIndustrial and Manufacturing Engineeringchemistry.chemical_compoundCalycosinchemistryFormononetinRadixIncubationFood ScienceInnovative Food Science & Emerging Technologies
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Negative pressure cavitation extraction and antioxidant activity of genistein and genistin from the roots of pigeon pea [Cajanus cajan (L.) Millsp.]

2010

Abstract A new method—negative pressure cavitation extraction (NPCE) was proposed and investigated for the extraction of the main isoflavonoids, namely genistein and genistin from pigeon pea roots. The effects of extraction time and particle size on the extraction yields were firstly optimized, then a central composite design (CCD) combined with response surface methodology (RSM) was used to study the effects of negative pressure, ethanol concentration and liquid/solid ratio on the extraction yields. The maximum extraction yields of genistein and genistin reached 0.418 and 0.398 mg/g, respectively, under the optimal conditions: extraction time 45 min, particle size 50 mesh, negative pressur…

ChromatographyCentral composite designbiologyDPPHExtraction (chemistry)GenisteinFiltration and Separationbiology.organism_classificationAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundCajanuschemistryGenistinParticle sizeResponse surface methodologySeparation and Purification Technology
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Enzymatic water extraction of taxifolin from wood sawdust of Larix gmelini (Rupr.) Rupr. and evaluation of its antioxidant activity

2011

Abstract An enzyme incubation–water extraction (EI–WE) method was developed and optimised for the extraction of the natural antioxidant taxifolin and of the total flavonoids from wood sawdust of Larix gmelini ( Rupr. ) Rupr. A factorial design and a central composite design approach were used for method optimisation. Optimal conditions were 0.5 mg/ml cellulase and 0.5 mg/ml pectinase, a pH of 5.0, a temperature of 32 °C and 18 h incubation time. The flavonoids and taxifolin were extracted in hot water at 50 °C for 30 min, with a solid to liquid ratio of 1:20. Under optimised conditions, the yields of taxifolin and total flavonoids increased from 1.06 ± 0.08 to 1.35 ± 0.04 mg/g and 4.13 ± 0.…

ChromatographyCentral composite designbiologyDPPHExtraction (chemistry)Water extractionGeneral MedicineCellulaseAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryvisual_artbiology.proteinvisual_art.visual_art_mediumTaxifolinSawdustPectinaseFood ScienceFood Chemistry
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Antioxidant capacity in fruit of Citrus cultivars with marked differences in pulp coloration: Contribution of carotenoids and vitamin C.

2020

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the specific contribution of carotenoids and vitamin C to the lipophilic and hydrophilic antioxidant capacity, respectively, of the pulp of citrus fruits using the genetic diversity in pigmentation and in the carotenoid complement. To this end, six citrus varieties were selected: two mandarins, Clemenules (Citrus clementina) and Nadorcott (C. reticulata); two grapefruits (C. paradisi), Marsh and Star Ruby; and two sweet oranges (C. sinensis), Valencia late and Valencia Ruby. Total carotenoid content and composition in the pulp of fruits were very different, in relation to their color singularities. Valencia Ruby and Nadorcott had the highest caroten…

Citrus030309 nutrition & dieteticsDPPHGeneral Chemical EngineeringColorAscorbic Acidengineering.materialIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringAntioxidants03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyPhytoeneVitamin CFood scienceCarotenoidchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesABTSVitamin CChemistryPulp (paper)food and beverages04 agricultural and veterinary sciences040401 food scienceCarotenoidsPhytoflueneLycopeneAntioxidant capacityFruitengineeringCitrus fruitFood ScienceCitrus sinensisFood science and technology international = Ciencia y tecnologia de los alimentos internacional
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Bioactive Constituents of Juniperus turbinata Guss. from La Maddalena Archipelago.

2018

A comprehensive phytochemical study of Juniperus turbinata (Cupressaceae) collected from La Maddalena Archipelago (Sardinia, Italy) is reported. Both the essential oil and the ethanolic extract obtained from the aerial parts were analyzed. The essential oil appears to belong to a new chemotype compared to other Mediterranean juniper accessions, as it was favored by geographic isolation of the isles. It showed a low content of monoterpene hydrocarbons and -terpineol, ent-manoyl oxide, 1,10-di-epi-cubenol as the major constituents. The ethanolic fraction contained mainly diterpenoids. Among these, 15-formyloxyimbricatolic acid (7) is a new natural product since it has hitherto been obtained o…

CupressaceaeFree RadicalsDPPHMonoterpeneJuniperus turbinata; biological activity; essential oil; imbricataloic acid; polar compoundsPhytochemicalsMolecular ConformationBioengineeringbiological activityAmentoflavonePhytochemical01 natural sciencesBiochemistryessential oilimbricataloic acidAntioxidantslaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundStructure-Activity RelationshiplawCell Line TumorOils VolatileHumanspolar compoundMolecular BiologyEssential oilCell ProliferationbiologyChemotypeTraditional medicineDose-Response Relationship Drug010405 organic chemistryCupressaceaeGeneral ChemistryGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationAntineoplastic Agents Phytogenic0104 chemical sciences010404 medicinal & biomolecular chemistrychemistryPhytochemicalItalyMolecular MedicineTroloxAntioxidantDrug Screening Assays AntitumorFree RadicalJuniperus turbinataHumanChemistrybiodiversity
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Polysaccharides from Pleurotus eryngii var. elaeoselini (Agaricomycetes), a New Potential Culinary-Medicinal Oyster Mushroom from Italy.

2020

Three water-soluble glucans (PELPS-A1, PELPS-A2, and PELPS-A3) purified from the hot water extract of the basidiomata of an edible mushroom Pleurotus eryngii var. elaeoselini by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose 32 and Sephadex G-100 column were found to consist of only D-glucose as monosaccharide constituent. Structural investigation was carried out by acid hydrolysis, periodate oxidation, and NMR experiments (1H-NMR, 13C-NMR, DQF-COSY, TOCSY, ROESY, HMQC, and HMBC). On the basis of these experiments, the structures of the repeating unit of the three isolated polysaccharides were established as follows: (1) PELPS-A1: {[→3)-α-D-Glcp-(1→]3→4)-α-D-Glcp-(1→2)-α-D-Glcp-(1→6)-α-D-Glcp-(1[→6)-β-D-…

DPPH assayAntioxidantMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyDPPHmedicine.medical_treatmentpolysaccharidesantioxidant activityPolysaccharidePleurotusApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyAntioxidantschemistry.chemical_compoundDrug Discoverymedicinehydroxyl radical scavenging activityMonosaccharidePleurotus eryngiiPleurotus eryngii var. elaoseliniGlucansPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationMushroombiologymedicinal mushroomsHydroxyl Radicalbiology.organism_classificationPleurotus eryngii var. elaoselini polysaccharides antioxidant activity DPPH assay hydroxyl radical scavenging activity medicinal mushroomsEdible mushroomchemistrySettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataHydroxyl radicalNuclear chemistryInternational journal of medicinal mushrooms
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Bioaccessibility of bioactive compounds after non-thermal processing of an exotic fruit juice blend sweetened with Stevia rebaudiana

2017

Abstract A comparative study of the bioaccessibility of bioactive compounds and antioxidant capacity in a fruit juice-Stevia rebaudiana mixture processed by pulsed electric fields (PEF), high voltage electrical discharges (HVED) and ultrasound (USN) technology at two equivalent energy inputs (32–256 kJ/kg) was made using an in vitro model. Ascorbic acid was not detected following intestinal digestion, while HVED, PEF and USN treatments increased total carotenoid bioaccessibility. HVED at an energy input of 32 kJ/kg improved bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds (34.2%), anthocyanins (31.0%) and antioxidant capacity (35.8%, 29.1%, 31.9%, for TEAC, ORAC and DPPH assay, respectively) compared…

DPPHBiological AvailabilityAscorbic AcidHealth benefitsAntioxidantsAnalytical ChemistryIn vitro modelAnthocyaninschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyElectricityPhenolsSteviaUltrasonicsFood scienceCarotenoidchemistry.chemical_classification04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral MedicineIntestinal digestionAscorbic acidCarotenoids040401 food scienceFruit and Vegetable JuicesStevia rebaudianachemistrySweetening AgentsFruit juiceFood AnalysisFood ScienceFood Chemistry
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